Pop singer’s hit song ‘Roar has become an anthem at events for the Democratic nominee, who’s seeking to edge out Bernie Sanders

Singer Katy Perry rallies supporters of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton outside the Iowa Events Center before the start of the Jefferson-Jackson dinner on October 24, 2015 in Des Moines, Iowa (Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP)
Singer Katy Perry rallies supporters of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton outside the Iowa Events Center before the start of the Jefferson-Jackson dinner on October 24, 2015 in Des Moines, Iowa (Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP)

 

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — Hillary Rodham Clinton was bringing her husband, former President Bill Clinton, and pop singer Katy Perry to Iowa on Saturday in a show of force before a pivotal dinner with thousands of Democrats in the early voting state.

The dinner caps a key stretch for Hillary Clinton, who received a boost from Vice President Joe Biden’s decision not to run on Wednesday and then put together a grinding, competent appearance on Thursday before a Republican-led congressional committee probing the deadly 2012 attacks on diplomatic outposts in Benghazi, Libya.

Her chief rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, planned to rally his supporters before marching across a bridge spanning the Des Moines River. One hundred days remain before the state’s presidential caucuses which lead off the state-by-state nominating contests. The afternoon events were designed to generate enthusiasm before the state Democratic party’s annual Jefferson-Jackson fundraiser. More than 6,000 activists are expected to attend the event, which traditionally serves as a kickoff to the Feb. 1 Iowa caucuses.

Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley is hoping for a breakout performance at the dinner, which catapulted Barack Obama in the fall of 2007 and led to his surprising victory in the caucuses.

Clinton and Sanders sit atop a Democratic presidential field that has effectively pared down to a two-person race for the nomination after Biden announced he would not seek the White House. Two lesser-known rivals, former Virginia Sen. Jim Webb and former Rhode Island governor and senator, Lincoln Chafee, abandoned the race following Clinton’s strong performance on Oct. 13 in the first Democratic primary debate.

In the hours before the dinner, Iowa’s capital city was full of pageantry as supporters of the three campaigns poured into Des Moines wearing T-shirts and waving signs.

Bill Clinton was headlining his first campaign rally at the pre-dinner concert featuring Perry, a Clinton backer whose hit song, “Roar,” is an anthem at Hillary Clinton events. The former president has raised money for his wife’s campaign, but the rally is his first big splash during the race.

“He’s an enormous asset,” said Clinton campaign communications director Jennifer Palmieri.

The dinne is an important showcase for Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist who has drawn large crowds with his calls for a “political revolution” to address the gap between the wealthy and the poor.

“If we win here in Iowa, and I think we’ve got a good chance to do it, and if we win in New Hampshire, and I think we have a good chance to do that, we have a road to victory,” Sanders said Friday night at a “#RockinTheBern” concert in Davenport, Iowa.

Clinton placed third in Iowa in 2008 and has since vowed to build a formidable organization to power her to victory here. She has sought to present herself as the heir to Obama’s legacy, while Sanders offers a more anti-establishment approach and often notes the large numbers of Democrats who stayed home in the 2014 midterm elections.

A recent Iowa poll by Bloomberg Politics and The Des Moines Register found Clinton with a slight lead in the state over Sanders, with the two candidates the choice of 9 in 10 voters. O’Malley was at 2 percent.

“Bernie Sanders is still a threat,” said Mo Elleithee, a former Clinton campaign aide who now leads the Georgetown University Institute of Politics and Public Service. “He can still mobilize a significant portion of the Democratic base.”

But he said Clinton is getting stronger and “more and more people who were nervous are feeling more comfortable with her.”

As reported by The Times of Israel